Yankees, Marlins still in rain delay on Sunday (start time announced)

Apr 5, 2026; Bronx, New York, USA; A general stadium view during a rain delayed start of the game between the New York Yankees and Miami Marlins at Yankee Stadium. Mandatory Credit: John Jones-Imagn Images | John Jones-Imagn Images

The Yankees are off to a sterling 7-1 start to the 2026 season and have already guaranteed themselves a third consecutive series victory. After sweeping the Giants and taking two out of three from the Mariners in Seattle, they’ve won the first two games of their first homestand of the campaign, beating the Marlins on Friday, 8-2, and then 9-7 last night. They’re eyeing another dusting today with Opening Day starter Max Fried on the mound, as he has yet to allow a run through two starts.

The Marlins aren’t a pushover, but Fried’s toughest opponent today might actually be the weather. It’s lousy today in the tri-state area and the Double-A Somerset Patriots have already postponedtheir series finale in Bridgewater against the Portland Sea Dogs (the High-A Hudson Valley Renegades have since done the same). Similarly, the tarp is on the field in the Bronx, and the Yankees have announced a delay to Sunday’s matinee.

Major League Baseball, however, is going to do everything it can to get this game in against the Marlins because it’s difficult to reschedule interleague series postponements. This is the only Yankees/Marlins series of the year and while the Fish will return to the area for series against the Mets, it would be very annoying to find an offday where they could theoretically play the Yankees.

MLB has time to wait this out until later, as the forecast says it will indeed stop raining before nightfall. At the very least, this isn’t starting until 3pm ET, and later is more likely.

Hang in there with us, put on some music or something, and we’ll tune into the series finale together when it actually starts!

Update

This is not a rain-related update, but it is an interesting wrinkle: The Marlins will no longer be starting Chris Paddack as initially expected. Closer Pete Fairbanks’ wife is pregnant and will be induced tomorrow morning, so he will instead start this game with Paddack following.

Non-Update Update

What else can one say but “lol.” Hang in there, folks.

Actual Update

All right, now we’re in business. See you fine folks a little after five o’clock! It only took … a breezy three and a half hours or so.

Minor League Recap: Doughty has strong start while Ingle, Genao and Walton go yard

Columbus Clippers Travis Bazzana (12) throws the ball to first base during home opener at Huntington Park on Tuesday, March 31, 2026, in Columbus, Ohio. | Samantha Madar/Columbus Dispatch / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Columbus Clippers 7, Indianapolis Indians 5 (F/7)

Clippers improve to 6-2

I think George Valera might be ready to be activated. The left-handed hitting slugger was perfect at the plate on Saturday, going 3-for-3 with a double and a walk to lead the Clippers offense.

Other standouts included Cooper Ingle, who went 2-for-3 with an impressive opposite field home run and Stuart Fairchild, who went 2-for-3. Nolan Jones went 1-for-2 with a walk and Petey Halpin went 1-for-2 with two walks and a stolen base.

Starting pitcher Ryan Webb was tagged for four runs on seven hits in 3.2 innings. He walked three and struck out four.

Tommy Mace provided some solid long relief, allowing one run on four hits in 2.2 innings to earn the win. The game was ended during the seventh inning with the Clippers leading by two runs due to poor weather.

Akron RubberDucks 5, Reading Fightin Phils 0

RubberDucks improve to 3-0

Akron’s pitching was the story of this game as the RubberDucks utilized five pitchers to shut out Reading.

Caden Favors led the way, tossing 4.0 shutout frames on just two hits with four strikeouts and two walks.

Magnus Ellerts followed Favors with 1.2 scoreless innings of one-hit ball with two strikeouts and two walks. Jack Jasiak retired the lone batter he faced while Hunter Stanley pitched 2.0 perfect innings with three strikeouts and Matt Jachec finished off the shutout with a scoreless ninth inning and a pair of whiffs.

On the offensive side of the equation, three different RubberDucks blasted home runs. Angel Genao went 2-for-4 with a three-run bomb.

Wuilfredo Antunez blasted off for his first home run of the year and Nick Mitchell went 2-for-4 with a home run and a double.

Ralphy Velazquez also reached base twice, going 1-for-3 with a walk while Juan Benjamin singled and stole a base.

Lake County Captains 6, West Michigan Whitecaps 3

Captains improve to 1-2

Lake County’s offense awoke from its slumber on Saturday, racking up six extra base hits including three home runs.

Aaron Walton led the way, going 2-for-4 with a home run and three runs batted in.

Esteban Gonzalez had the other multi-hit game, going 2-for-4 with a home run and a double while Bennett Thompson impressively homered and walked three times.

Jaison Chourio doubled and walked while Nolan Schubart doubled.

Top draft pick Jace LaViolette’s struggled are ongoing as he went 0-for-4 with three strikeouts. He still is seeking his first hit of the young season and has struck out in seven of his first eight plate appearances.

Starting pitcher Braylon Doughty was spectacular, tossing 3.0 scoreless innings while allowing just one hit, striking out two and walking zero.

Rafe Schlesinger followed Doughty with 4.0 scoreless innings of long relief, allowing four hits with one walk while striking out five batters.

Cam Walty and Donovan Zsak closed out the victory with 1.2 perfect innings with four strikeouts.

The long pitching black mark was Kendeglys Virguez struggled, allowing three runs in just 0.1 innings of relief.

Hill City Howlers 2, Kannapolis Cannon Ballers 19

Howlers fall to 2-1

I’m trying to think of a good adjective to describe this game. Debacle, fiasco, catastrophe, apocalypse? I’m not sure any of them fit. This game was so bad that I’m not sure the word that fittingly describes it has been invented yet.

Prep pitching prospect Chase Mobley was the starting pitcher and he got absolutely annihilated for six runs in 0.1 innings. He only allowed one hit, but he walked three and hit two more.

Eudry Alcantara relieved Mobley and he didn’t fare any better, allowing two inherited runners to score and then giving up six runs of his own in just 0.1 innings. Alcantara was tagged for five hits, two of them home runs and he walked two.

Both Mobley and Alcantara are beginning the year with ERAs of 162.00. It can only get better from there (hopefully).

Offensively, no one had an extra base hit and no one reached base twice. If you watched this game, perhaps you can pray a Men in Black-esque memory wipe device gets invented soon.

Easter Surprise: Islanders fire Patrick Roy, hire Pete DeBoer as head coach

And so it ends. | NHLI via Getty Images

Stuck in their first four-game losing streak of the season at a critical point in an unexpected playoff chase, the New York Islanders fired Patrick Roy as head coach and replaced him with Pete DeBoer.

It was shocking in that it came on Easter Sunday, and amid their first sustained struggle in a season where external (if not internal) expectations were limited, and DeBoer now has just six games in this regular season to make some sort of impact.

But with the way the Islanders had played lately, and the degree to which they’ve relied on superlative performances by rookie Calder favorite Matthew Schaefer and Vezina contender Ilya Sorokin, it was common to wonder how long into this summer or next season Mathieu Darche would stick with Roy. The Islanders just began a rare four-day break in their game schedule, so if Darche was thinking of a late-season change for a while, this was the window.

DeBoer, of course, has a long track record of regular season success and long post-season runs, including an odds-defying 9-0 in Games 7. But he’s also had a short, burn-hot-and-fast shelf life in several of his previous stops. His last firing, by the Dallas Stars, came after mounting tension between him and players, including the goalie he threw under the bus after a playoff elimination.

The NHL sums up his record:

DeBoer is 662-447-152 in 1,261 regular-season games for the Florida Panthers, Devils, San Jose Sharks, Golden Knights and Stars, and 97-82 in 179 Stanley Cup Playoff games while also guiding San Jose to the 2016 Final, a six-game loss to the Pittsburgh Penguins. His teams have advanced to at least the third round of the playoffs each of his past six seasons qualifying for the postseason, and in eight of his 10 overall.

Roy finishes his Islanders tenure with a record of 97-78-22 in 197 games. His lone playoff appearance was when he. replaced Lane Lambert on their way to a traditional five-game loss to the Carolina Hurricanes. His press conferences and media scrums, if not his on-ice structure, will be missed.

Hornets vs Timberwolves Prediction, Picks & Odds for Tonight’s NBA Game

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The Charlotte Hornets need a flawless finish to avoid the Play-In tournament, and they can help their chances tonight against the faltering Minnesota Timberwolves.

Minnesota has dropped three of its last four games and will be without Anthony Edwards, but my Hornets vs. Timberwolves predictions trust Rudy Gobert to hold down the paint at Target Center.

Take a closer look at this marquee showdown on Sunday, April 5, with my free NBA picks and betting angles.

Hornets vs Timberwolves prediction

Hornets vs Timberwolves best bet: Rudy Gobert Over 11.5 rebounds (-115)

The Minnesota Timberwolves offense has been stuck in the mud lately, with 110 or fewer points in six of their last seven games. But Minnesota continues to do a nice job at the other end of the floor, led by Rudy Gobert’s elite rebounding.

Gobert has nailed this Over in seven of his past nine contests, and he’s actually finished with 14+ boards in five of those outings, despite only playing 30+ minutes just once in his last six games.

Make no mistake, the hosts are going to ask even more of Gobert defensively without Anthony Edwards and Jaden McDaniels to take on the perimeter assignments. As long as he can avoid being dragged out to the 3-point line on the Charlotte Hornets' shooters, I expect him to have an edge against Moussa Diabate and Ryan Kalkbrenner.

Gobert dominated the Hornets on the glass earlier this season, on the way to 15 rebounds, and he’s on pace for a career-high with 4.0 offensive rebounds per night.

Charlotte’s style of play helps, too.

The visitors launch the second-most 3-pointers per game (43), and that should create opportunities for long rebounds. Against the Hornets’ smaller lineups, Gobert, Naz Reid, and Julius Randle will all have chances to hit their rebounding Overs, but I’ll stick with the Frenchman as the value pick.

Hornets vs Timberwolves same-game parlay

I’m banking on a fierce battle on the glass tonight, with Gobert coming off a 16-rebound effort on Friday against the 76ers and Diabate hauling in 10+ boards in three of his last four outings. Rudy has the extra size, but Diabate is a relentless pest on the glass.

The Under also offers good value. It’s 1-9 in the T-Wolves’ last 10 games, and Minnesota’s offensive numbers will take a hit again without Ant Man. Plus, six of Charlotte’s past eight contests have cashed the Under.

Hornets vs Timberwolves SGP

  • Rudy Gobert Over 11.5 rebounds
  • Moussa Diabate Over 9.5 rebounds
  • Under 226.5

Our "from downtown" SGP: Feel the sting

The Hornets are 8-2 in their last 10 games, and this SGP taps into the visitors’ hot streak, which has kept them in the fight for the No. 6 seed. LaMelo Ball has dished 8+ dimes in four of his past five contests, while Kon Knueppel is fresh off consecutive 20-point games.

Hornets vs Timberwolves SGP

  • Hornets moneyline
  • LaMelo Ball Over 7.5 assists
  • Moussa Diabate Over 9.5 rebounds
  • Kon Knueppel Over 17.5 points

Hornets vs Timberwolves odds

  • Spread: Hornets -3.5 (-110) | Timberwolves +3.5 (-110)
  • Moneyline: Hornets -160 | Timberwolves +135
  • Over/Under: Over 226.5 (-110) | Under 226.5 (-110)

Hornets vs Timberwolves betting trend to know

The Under is 48-30 for the Hornets this season. Find more NBA betting trends for Hornets vs. Timberwolves.

How to watch Hornets vs Timberwolves

LocationTarget Center, Minneapolis, MN
DateSunday, April 5, 2026
Tip-off7:00 p.m. ET
TVFDSN Southeast Charlotte, FDSN North

Hornets vs Timberwolves latest injuries

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Everything to know of 2026 Men's NCAA Tournament championship game

Just one more game until a national champion is crowned for the 2026 men's college basketball season.

With 66 games in the books, the stage has been set for No. 1 Michigan and No. 2 Connecticut to face off in the 2026 Men's NCAA Tournament national championship game.

While Dan Hurley and the Huskies look to make history with their third championship in four seasons, Dusty May will look to help the Wolverines end a 37-year drought with the program's first national title since 1989.

UConn defeated No. 3 seed Illinois 71-62 to advance to the title game, while Michigan torpedoed Arizona 91-73 to win another game by double figures during an impressive NCAA Tournament run.

Here’s everything you need to know about the 2026 men's NCAA national championship game, from the time to the TV channel.

When is March Madness national championship game?

The men's national title game tips off on Monday, April 6, at 8:50 p.m. ET.

Where is March Madness national championship game?

The 2026 Men's NCAA Tournament national championship game will be held at Lucas Oil Stadium, home of the NFL's Indianapolis Colts.

What channel is March Madness national championship game?

The men's title game will be broadcast nationally on TBS, TNT and truTV, with Ian Eagle (play-by-play), Bill Raftery (analyst), Grant Hill (analyst) and Tracy Wolfson (sideline reporter) on the call from the game.

Where to stream March Madness national championship game

The men's NCAA Tournament national championship game can be streamed on NCAA March Madness Live (with a valid cable login), HBO Max, which requires a subscription, and Sling TV , which carries Turner Broadcast stations.

Who won March Madness in 2025?

Last year, Todd Golden and Walter Clayton Jr. led Florida to the program's third national championship with a 65-63 win over Kelvin Sampson and Houston in the title game.

There won't be a back-to-back champion this year after Iowa took down the Gators in the second round of the NCAA Tournament this season.

March Madness champions, by year

Here's a look at the year-by-year NCAA Tournament national champions in men's basketball, since 2006. The full list can be found here:

  • 2025: Florida defeats Houston, 65-63
  • 2024: UConn defeats Purdue, 75-60
  • 2023: UConn defeats San Diego State, 76-59
  • 2022: Kansas defeats North Carolina, 72-69
  • 2021: Baylor defeats Gonzaga, 86-70
  • 2020: Canceled due to COVID-19
  • 2019: Virginia defeats Texas Tech, 85-77, OT
  • 2018: Villanova defeats Michigan, 79-62
  • 2017: North Carolina defeats Gonzaga, 71-65
  • 2016: Villanova defeats North Carolina, 77-74
  • 2015: Duke defeats Wisconsin, 6-63
  • 2014: UConn defeats Kentucky, 60-54
  • 2013: Louisville defeats Michigan, 82-76 *
  • 2012: Kentucky defeats Kansas, 67-59
  • 2011: UConn defeats Butler, 53-41
  • 2010: Duke defeats Butler, 61-59
  • 2009: North Carolina defeats Michigan State, 89-72
  • 2008: Kansas defeats Memphis, 75-68, OT
  • 2007: Florida defeats Ohio State, 84-75
  • 2006: Florida defeats UCLA, 73-57

* vacated by NCAA

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: March Madness men's championship game date, time, TV, odds, more to know

GAME THREAD: Cubs at Guardians, game two, 10 of 162

Portrait of Luscious "Luke" Easter (1915 - 1979), First Baseman for the Cleveland Indians of the American League during Major League Baseball Spring Training circa March 1949 at Hi Corbett Field in Tucson, Arizona, United States. (Photo by Keystone View Company/FPG/Archive Photos/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Well, that wasn’t good. Here’s hoping game 2 is better

Cubs Take Game One of Double Header

CLEVELAND, OHIO - APRIL 05: Steven Kwan #38 of the Cleveland Guardians catches a fly ball hit by Pete Crow-Armstrong of the Chicago Cubs during the fourth inning in game one of a doubleheader at Progressive Field on April 05, 2026 in Cleveland, Ohio. (Photo by Nick Cammett/Getty Images) | Getty Images

After last night’s postponed game, the Guardians faced a chilly Sunday double header against the Chicago Cubs. In game one, Slade Cecconi took the mound for Cleveland and Edward Cabrera for Chicago. Both starting pitchers gave it their all, keeping it a scoreless game into the eighth with both teams only notching one hit.

Cleveland’s hit came in the bottom of the 6th with a lead off double from CJ Kayfus.

The Guardians finally got pressure on Cabrera, taking advantage of his walks. After CJ’s lead off double, Steven Kwan hit a sacrifice bunt to advance the runner to third. Chase DeLauter worked a 2-2 count and hit into a fielder’s choice. Kayfus was thrown out at home, but CDL reached first safely. José Ramírez worked an eight pitch at bat, including a loud foul ball, before being walked. Kyle Manzardo drew a walk to load the bases and force Cabrera out of the game with 97 pitches. Bo Naylor fought, fouling off the first three pitches from relief pitcher Caleb Thielbar, taking two balls, but ultimately popping up to center leaving three runners stranded.

Slade Cecconi ended the day having given the Guardians 6.0 innings pitched of one hit, one walk baseball. Slade struck out six batters, turning things over to Tim Herrin.

Herrin bookended the inning with strikeouts, sending it to Cleveland’s 6-7-8 hitters. Daniel Schneemann grounded out to first, but Brayan Rocchio worked a 3-2 count, fouling off pitch after pitch. Thielbar’s 10th pitch of the at bat was called a strike. Rocchio challenged the pitch and was awarded first on an overturned strike. Gabriel Arias grounded into a forceout, leaving two outs for pinch hitter David Fry. Fry got into a slider sending it to foul territory where it was caught by left fielder Ian Happ to retire the side.

Connor Brogon replaced Tim Herrin in the top of the eighth, giving up a lead off walk. Matt Shaw hit a sacrifice bunt to advance the runner. Catcher Miguel Amaya singled to right, breaking up the shutout, scoring the pinch runner from second. The Guardians defense kept the Cubs from tacking on more runs with an amazing play from Gabriel Arias to Kyle Manzardo.

The Guardians turned to the top of the order, hoping to add a run of their own. Steven Kwan was hit by pitch to lead off the inning, but Chase DeLauter grounded into a double play that was confirmed after a challenge. José popped up, leaving the Cubs with a one-run lead.

Peyton Pallette pitched the ninth and once again delivered a great performance. Pallette struck out Ian Happ and Pete Crow-Armstrong. Happ went 0-for-4 on the day, striking out four times. Nico Hoerner was hit by pitch, but it didn’t mean much as Dansby Swanson grounded into a force out to retire the side.

Ultimately the Guardians succumbed to the Sunday/Double Header curse and fell to the Cubs 1-0.

Sabres Clinch Playoff Spot, But Slide Continues After Loss In Washington

Saturday was an historic day for the Buffalo Sabres, as the club qualified for the Stanley Cup Playoffs for the first time in 15 years after the Detroit Red Wings lost 4-1 to the New York Rangers on Saturday afternoon, but the Sabres recent struggles continued, as they fell two points behind Tampa Bay for top spot in the Atlantic and into third place following a 6-2 loss to the Washington Capitals. 

Buffalo fell behind 3-0 less than six minutes into the game, with Alex Lyon being pulled in favor of rookie Colten Ellis. The Sabres narrowed the gap to 3-2 by the end of the first, but the Capitals re-established a two-goal cushion in the middle frame and pulled away with a pair of third-period goals.  

The loss marked the Sabres first pair of consecutive regulation losses since before GM Kevyn Adams was fired in early December and the fifth loss in the last seven games (2-3-2). It was also the third straight subpar outing for Lyon, who allowed six goals on 33 shots in an overtime loss to Anaheim on March 22 and four goals on 19 shots against Detroit on March 27.  

The Lightning pulled into a two-point lead for top spot with a 3-1 win over Boston on Saturday, and Montreal tied the Sabres with 100 points and into second place based on having a game in hand and a one-game lead in regulation/overtime wins after a 4-3 shootout win in New Jersey.  Monday’s matchup against Tampa Bay takes on even more meaning for Buffalo, as it is a must-win to keep their chances of winning the division alive. The Sabres could be two points behind the Habs by that time, since Montreal and the Devils face each other in the second of a home-and-home at the Bell Centre on Sunday night. 

Other Sabres Stories

Six Former Sabres Who Signed Elsewhere

Monday's matchup against Tampa is a must win if the Sabres hope to have home-ice advantage in the first round of the playoffs.

Head coach Lindy Ruff spoke after the game:

Thoughts on the slow start in the loss:

We can't defend as poorly as we did on those first couple goals. I mean, we left two guys wide open. Coverage wasn't good, and ends up in the back of the net. We've taken a lot of pride. Our defensive play has been a big reason why we got to where we got. We can't take that for granted. (We took the timeout and) I talked about our defensive zone coverage. Just talked about, we've got to get back, got to stop inside. We were circling. I thought we fought our way back to 3-2, if you look at the second period, we have a two-on-one, we don't execute, would have made the game 3-3, and that two-on-one turned into a two-on-one the other way, and and they finished it (and) made it 4-2, and then now we're chasing the game again. 

Did you pull Lyon to change momentum?

Yeah, for sure. He wasn't out there covering those guys that were wide open. He was trying to.

All of a sudden, you are in third place, which seems kind of shocking given on where the club has been for weeks:

You just have to refocus. You look at some of those plays that we made in our own end that weren't good enough. If you start cheating a little bit on offense, it hurts you, and I thought a couple times we got on the wrong side of the puck, and it hurt us. (Turning things around) starts with breaking the puck out. We haven't broke the puck out well enough. I think the first or second goal when (Byram) had it, it should be a play we're breaking the puck out. We turn that over and turnovers like that. When we have the puck, our players are automatically starting to head the other direction. So everything's connected. Break the puck out better, buy a little more time for your defense going back.

 

Follow Michael on X, Instagram @MikeInBuffalo

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How Dusty May built Michigan basketball into this behemoth: He aced transfer portal

INDIANAPOLIS – Dusty May is a self-described “blue-collar guy” who cut grass, cut tobacco, baled hay and worked in turkey barns growing up in Greene County, Indiana, where he learned that “if you see a neighbor moving in, you go help them.”

So when Michigan point guard Elliot Cadeau arrived on campus last year as a transfer from North Carolina, May was there to help carry a table up a flight of stairs to the junior’s new apartment.

“When a player is moving in, it's a lot quicker if we walk across the parking lot and help them move in rather than just mom and dad,” said May. “It's kind of how we run our program.”

And Michigan’s program runs on transfers such as Cadeau, who after two often tumultuous seasons with the Tar Heels has found a home and flourished on the Wolverines’ newcomer-heavy roster.

“I think that just comes from the coaching. They have so much confidence in me,” Cadeau said after Michigan’s Final Four win against Arizona. “It just helps me stay calm. If I turn the ball over and I look over at coach, they're calm. So that just helps me stay calm as well.”

There is no bigger test for a major-conference program and coach than personnel management, the annual acquisition and blending of talent in an era of NIL and rampant player movement.

May and Michigan have aced this test with flying colors, piecing together a rotation largely composed of portal additions to evolve into a seemingly unstoppable force heading into Monday night’s national championship game against Connecticut.

“It came together even better than we could ever imagine,” said assistant coach and general manager Kyle Church.

The Wolverines have done so by stressing three assets when evaluating transfers, said May.

While production and potential play a role in deciding who Michigan pursues out of the transfer portal, the search ultimately centers on “guys who love ball, who are great teammates, who are competitors,” he said.

“Competitors because we have a strong belief that competitors are going to figure out a way to win. Whatever that is, they're just going to figure out a way to win whatever they're playing.

“And then loving ball would probably be a close, close second. Sometimes we say we don't really care. You can love to compete or you can love ball. We think we can get to the end result as long as you have one of those.”

Leaning on personality and cultural fit has helped the Wolverines divvy up minutes among one of the deepest and most talented rosters in the country.

“Now, what makes Dusty May special as a coach is obviously his eye for talent, his ability to construct a roster, the fact that he insulates himself with an excellent coaching staff, and his ability to build team and culture. Like he's got a special eye for how to put together a great team,” Connecticut coach Dan Hurley said.

“Things are volatile. It's year to year. You've got to have the skill set to do it on a year-to-year basis because things are volatile.”

Of the eight players in the Wolverines’ tournament rotation, six started their college careers elsewhere and transferred into the program. The exceptions are redshirt senior forward Will Tschetter and freshman guard Trey McKenney.

Two joined the program at least two seasons ago: guard Roddy Gayle Jr. transferred from Ohio State before May’s debut in 2024, and former Texas Tech and Alabama guard Nimari Burnett enrolled in 2023, when the Wolverines were led by former coach Juwan Howard.

“During the summer, I just told the guys that everything is going to happen quickly,” Gayle said. “Especially under coach May, you may not understand what he’s asking of you early on. But once you just buy into his program, buy into what he’s telling you, everything will work out just fine. I’m a true believer in that.”

The four transfers who arrived this past summer have transformed Michigan from Big Ten contender to the favorite to capture the program’s second national championship.

“I would say we have the right people around this program, and we have the right players,” McKenney said. “We have players that are really selfless, and you can tell that even when we're under one roof in the summer, so I think it just really carried over from the summer and the fall when we were putting in all that work together and all that sweat that we had.”

None have bigger than Alabama-Birmingham forward Yaxel Lendeborg. The All-America selection has been a remarkably consistent inside-out threat in an offense that can still flourish in his absence, as in the Final Four blowout of Arizona.

Former UCLA center Aday Mara has taken on a starting role after coming off the bench for the Bruins and has evolved into a dominant interior presence. He scored a career-best 26 points in the win against the Wildcats.

Sophomore forward Morez Johnson Jr. has made a similar leap after transferring from Illinois, showcasing the strength and athleticism that have made him a likely first-round pick in this year’s NBA draft. And Cadeau has stabilized his game in Ann Arbor, with a newfound sense of confidence in his shooting that has given Michigan yet another perimeter threat.

Between the 7-3 Mara, 6-10 Johnson and 6-9 Lendeborg, the Wolverines added major size to the frontcourt this offseason. In that way, they resemble May’s Final Four team at Florida Atlantic, where the Owls “were so big, our defensive numbers were top five in the country,” he said.

But the Wolverines aren’t “married to being big,” May added. “If everybody goes big, we might weave and go small. Who knows? We're not winning because we're big. We're winning because we have really good players and smart players.”

Overall, transfers have combined for 75.6% of Michigan’s scoring. Transfers are the Wolverines’ four leading rebounders. The top three in assists are transfers, and so are the top four in blocks per game.

“You can build a cohesive unit maybe a little bit faster than anyone can really realize,” Church said. “If people like the work and enjoy the process, then you can find that cohesion fairly quickly.”

But the recruitment of players in the transfer portal is much different than traditional recruiting on the high school level, when programs can often spend months to years building relationships.

In comparison, recruiting the portal is like speed dating. Given the abbreviated courtship, Michigan will do background work on a prospective transfer by “leaning on people around them that you trust,” Church said, including the player’s former coaching staff, coaches they might have played against or their former high school and AAU coach. If the Wolverines are lucky, they may have a preexisting relationship by virtue of recruiting the player coming out of high school.

“We try to be brutally honest,” said Church. “And we try to over-deliver and under-promise. If they want to come under those circumstances and we feel like we have a good character reference and they like playing hard, they like passing the ball, they like basketball, then we’ll find a way to make it work.”

Yet none of these transfers were necessarily a sure thing, and many arrived as underdeveloped or inconsistent producers at their previous stops. There’s no greater example of this than Cadeau, who failed to deliver on his five-star billing at UNC and was seen as the poster child for the Tar Heels’ unrealized expectations.

Lendeborg came from UAB. Johnson was a backup at Illinois, though his explosiveness was obvious even in this reserve role. Mara’s career never got off the ground at UCLA. In one way or another, each new addition this offseason represented a roll of the dice for May and Michigan.

“Look, I know this is going to set off a Twitter firestorm, but I think we all are better in certain situations than others,” May said. “There's an environment that's right for me. There's an environment that's right for you. Sometimes you don't choose the right environment from the beginning or sometimes as people we change and we need something different, for a number of reasons.

“The way we choose to look at it, we're going to bring in really, really good guys that are high achievers, that want to do it the way we want to do it.”

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Michigan basketball roster built via transfer portal on cusp of championship

Cubs 1, Guardians 0: A 1968 throwback game

During the Marquee Sports Network broadcast of the Cubs’ 1-o win over the Guardians in Game 1 of Sunday’s doubleheader, Jim Deshaies referred to it as the headline reads: “a throwback from 1968.” That year was known as “The Year of The Pitcher,” with runs down all across MLB. The Cubs won four games by 1-0 that year, and lost six — and all six of the losses were started by Fergie Jenkins.

This game was much like things were back then, particularly the way the Cubs scored their only run of the game — a walk, a pinch-runner, a sacrifice bunt and another hit scoring said pinch-runner.

This game was the Cubs’ first 1-0 win since Aug. 1, 2025, when they defeated the Orioles by that score at Wrigley Field — in just one hour, 49 minutes! This one was a bit longer (2:37) but still satisfying.

Edward Cabrera didn’t allow any hits through five innings and just one overall in six, but he had trouble throwing strikes. That was his biggest issue when he was with the Marlins, and hopefully it won’t continue to be so as a Cub. Today Cabrera threw 97 pitches, and only 51 were strikes. Nevertheless, he had the Guardians off balance enough to get through six scoreless innings.

Here’s more on Cabrera’s outing [VIDEO].

More on Cabrera from BCB’s JohnW53:

Edward Cabrera has allowed no runs in 11.2 innings. Only four Cubs yielded none and pitched as many or more innings in their first two starts of a season:
18: Bill Lee, 1934
15: Mike Prendergast, 1916
15: Mike Bielecki, 1991
12: Marcus Stroman, 2023
Randy Wells, in 2009, and Matthew Boyd, in 2025, pitched 11.

And still more:

Cabrera gave up one hit and walked five. Only 10 previous Cubs starters had done that. Four were knocked out in 1.0 to 2.1 innings.
The six others, in chronological order:
June 22, 1913: George Pierce (5.0, no runs)
May 2, 1943: Dick Barrett (7.0, one unearned run)
May 30, 1964: Sterling Slaughter (7.0, no runs)
April 8, 1978: Ray Burris (7.0, three runs, one earned)
Oct. 6, 2001: Julian Tavarez (7.1, two runs, both earned)
June 1, 2008: Ted Lilly (6.0, no runs)

The Cubs got some great defense helping keep the game scoreless. Here’s a nice play from Michael Busch in the second [VIDEO].

And here’s Miguel Amaya throwing out Brayan Rocchio trying to steal in the third [VIDEO].

Cabrera got in trouble in the sixth, loading the bases with two outs on a couple of walks after the hit that broke up any idea of a no-hit bid. Caleb Thielbar entered and got out of the jam [VIDEO].

The Cubs finally got on the board in the eighth with the plays I noted at the top of this post. Michael Conforto led off with a walk. Dylan Carlson — hey there, finally getting in a game! — ran for him. Matt Shaw laid down a perfect sacrifice bunt, with Carlson advancing to second.

Amaya’s single to right scored Carlson [VIDEO].

Regarding Carlson’s first Cubs appearance, from John:

All players before Dylan Carlson today who did not bat and scored a run in their first game as a Cub, after having played for at least one other MLB team:
Doc Marshall, on June 1, 1908
Tony La Russa, on April 6, 1973 (scored the winning run on a ninth-inning walk-off walk to Rick Monday on Opening Day)
Leonys Martin, on Sep. 4, 2017
Twelve others turned the trick in their MLB debut as a Cub. Mike Fontenot, on April 13, 2005, was the only one of those since the start of 1974.

Hoby Milner got in trouble with a leadoff HBP in the eighth, but got out of it thanks in part to this slick double play [VIDEO].

The Cubs didn’t score in the ninth and Daniel Palencia came on for the save opportunity, his first of 2026. He had no trouble dispatching the Guardians 1-2-3. Here’s the final out — at 100 miles per hour [VIDEO].

Last fun fact from this game, as noted on the broadcast: The three combined hits in this game were the fewest for any Cubs game since the Cubs and Dodgers combined for just one hit in Sandy Koufax’s perfect game on Sept. 9, 1965.

The Cubs will go for a doubleheader sweep shortly, probably 40-45 minutes after this recap posts. Shōta Imanaga will start for the Cubs and rookie Parker Messick goes for Cleveland. All the pitcher preview info and other information about Game 2 can be found in this doubleheader preview article. There will be a “Live!” pitch thread posting at just a few minutes before the first pitch of Game 2.

Ryan Weiss’ Time May Be Now for Astros

HOUSTON, TEXAS - MARCH 30: Ryan Weiss #51 of the Houston Astros pitches in the eighth inning against the Boston Red Sox at Daikin Park on March 30, 2026 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Houston Astros/Getty Images) | Getty Images

With Hunter Brown going on the IL and Cristian Javier’s pronounced struggles, the KBO star may be getting his chance to start for Houston sooner than later.

Ryan Weiss was not a big name on the free agent market this offseason. In fact, he had never pitched in an MLB game.

Astros GM Dana Brown, however, made the decision to sign him out of the KBO, where he had just led his team to Korea’s version of the World Series.

Weiss was coming off his best season as a professional. A 16-5 record with a 2.87 ERA and 1.024 WHIP for Hanwha, including 207K in 178.2 innings. He showed he could throw the innings and miss bats.

He wanted an MLB chance, Brown gave it to him.

When Weiss signed in Houston, he was told he would be given a chance to compete for a starting role. Despite pitching well in spring, it was always going to be an uphill battle for him to win a spot in the rotation to start the year. Before the season started, Manager Joe Espada informed him he would begin the year in the bullpen.

The Astros, however, have dealt with a litany of injuries to their starting pitching the last two seasons, had a large pair of shoes to fill in the departing Framber Valdez, and were counting on several pitchers (Cristian Javier, Lance McCullers Jr., Spencer Arrighetti) who were returning from injury shortened seasons. There was a good chance at some point, Weiss’ number would be called to start.

That time may be this week.

The Astros announced today that staff ace Hunter Brown was going on the 15-day IL with a right shoulder strain. Brown felt something Friday during his throwing program.

While the exact extent of Brown’s injury is not yet publicly known, that it is his shoulder is certainly worrisome. For a pitching staff already without it’s closer (also coming back from a shoulder injury) and one of the starters they were counting on in Javier having extreme command struggles early on, the depth that GM Dana Brown built this offseason is going to be tested quickly.

Espada said today that he doesn’t know who will start for the team tomorrow in Denver when it faces the Rockies for 3 games at Coors Field. Brown was scheduled to make his third start of the season.

Weiss last pitched three scoreless innings on Friday, likely making him unavailable for starter duty on Tuesday on just 3 days rest. However he could certainly be in line for a start later in the week, or the next time Brown’s turn comes along.

It is possible the Astros could use Weiss is a somewhat lesser capacity, knowing he is on short rest for Tuesday but still using him for multiple innings (2, maybe 3 depending on pitch count). A.J. Blubaugh last worked Wednesday and would be on full starter’s length rest, but he is not stretched out enough to go more than three innings right now. Blubaugh also appears to be becoming a more important leverage arm at the back of the Astros pen right now.

A tandem approach with Blubaugh and Weiss could get the team though potentially 5 innings, before ceding to the rest of the pen. Cody Bolton, who pitched 3 innings Tuesday, would also be available for multiple inning duty as well.

While not an ideal plan, it would allow the Astros to get Weiss on Brown’s schedule.

Spencer Arrighetti, whom the team planned to call up once they start their stretch of 13 straight games on April 10, just threw 4.1 innings of scoreless, hitless baseball with 9 strikeouts Friday. He would not be ready to go on Tuesday, and may likely would be utilized that first game on the 10th to push all the current starters back a day.

Losing Brown for any protracted period would be a tough blow for the Astros, but having Weiss able to fill the spot is exactly what the team may need.

That chance Ryan Weiss wanted to be a starter may be now.

Mookie Betts injury update: Dodgers place SS on IL with oblique strain

On the same day that storm clouds delayed the Los Angeles Dodgers' series finale against the Nationals in Washington, D.C Sunday, April 5, the team has also gotten some clarity on the injury to star shortstop Mookie Betts.

The Dodgers are placing Betts on the 10-day injured list with a right oblique strain, manager Dave Roberts announced pregame. In the corresponding roster move, the team has recalled infielder Hyeseong Kim from Triple-A Oklahoma City.

Betts drew a walk in his lone plate appearance in the top of the first inning of Saturday's 10-5 win over the Washington Nationals and scored from first on a two-run double from Freddie Freeman, but he exited the game with what was initially described as lower back tightness. Miguel Rojas replaced him at shortstop for the bottom of the first.

Betts underwent an MRI Saturday night, which revealed an oblique strain that the Dodgers believe likely happened on a check swing during his at-bat but that he didn't feel until he started running the bases.

Roberts told reporters that he felt "a little something in (his) stomach" when he learned of the MRI results but felt reassured once he spoke with Betts.

"He's actually in better spirits," Roberts told reporters. "Obviously disappointed, but just the way he feels today, and I think he's had some dealings with that before and said it's better than he recalls past experience. So that was encouraging."

The Dodgers injury report on MLB.com lists Betts' expected return for May. And while Roberts said he "would take the under" on the standard 4–6-week recovery period, he hesitated to put a definitive timeline due to the tricky nature of oblique injuries.

The Dodgers have three main options to turn to in Betts' absence between Rojas, Kim and rookie Alex Freeland. Roberts said he sees Rojas and Kim taking on the bulk of the reps at short and keeping Freeland in an everyday role at second base.

"That's how I'm gonna divvy it up and then we'll see," Roberts said. "We got three starters in Toronto, so Hyeseong will play short against Scherzer, and then we'll probably start two of the three."

As for the lineup, Roberts mused about the possibility of moving center fielder Andy Pages up in the order after starting off the season on tear, going 15-for-30 at the plate with three home runs and 10 RBI through eight games, though Roberts also said he likes the dynamic of the lineup as-is.

But regardless, losing Betts for a stretch of time is a blow for the Dodgers. He had gotten off to a slow start at the dish – as has most of the top of the order – but went 2-for-6 with a two-run go-ahead homer in the third inning of Friday's 13-6 win in DC.

"We were starting to get going a bit," Roberts said. "And he way he's playing defense, he's a big part of what we do. Any time you miss it's going to take some time to get your footing, so disappointed for him. But hopeful that it's not long term."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Dodgers' Mookie Betts placed on injury list with oblique strain

4/5 Gamethread: Giants vs. Mets

Logan Webb reaching back to throw a pitch.
SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA - MARCH 25: Logan Webb #62 of the San Francisco Giants pitches against the New York Yankees during the first inning on Opening Day at Oracle Park on March 25, 2026 in San Francisco, California. (Photo by Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The San Francisco Giants started their four-game series against the New York Mets in exciting fashion. Then it turned downhill very, very quickly, with two ugly losses. Now, on Easter Sunday, the Giants will look to get back in the win column, and earn a series split.

Taking the mound for San Francisco is their ace, right-hander Logan Webb, who makes his third start of the season. It hasn’t quite been the year that Webb has been looking for, as he’s 1-1 with a 7.36 ERA, though he sports a 2.64 FIP. He has 12 strikeouts against five walks in 11 innings, and in his most recent game gave up three runs in six innings against the San Diego Padres.

On the other side is fellow right-handed pitcher Kodai Senga, who is coming off an up-and-down 2025 in which he made 22 starts, had a 7-6 record, posted a 3.02 ERA and a 4.12 FIP, and had 109 strikeouts against 55 walks in 113.1 innings. This is Senga’s second start of the year, after he allowed two runs in six innings against the St. Louis Cardinals in his season debut.

Enjoy the game, everyone. Go Giants!

Game #10

Who: San Francisco Giants (3-6) vs. New York Mets (5-4)

Where: Oracle Park, San Francisco, California

When: 1:05 p.m. PT

Regional broadcast: NBC Sports Bay Area, KNTV

National broadcast: n/a

Radio: KNBR 680 AM/104.5 FM, KSFN 1510 AM

Astros vs. A’s Game Thread, Game 10, 4/5/2026

HOUSTON, TEXAS - MARCH 30: Lance McCullers Jr. #43 of the Houston Astros looks on during the game against the Boston Red Sox at Daikin Park on March 30, 2026 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Kenneth Richmond/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Houston Astros (6-3) look to take the rubber game of a 3 game series with the Athletics (2-6) in Sacramento.

RHP Lance McCullers Jr. will be on the mound for the Astros this afternoon opposite LHP Jacob Lopez and the Athletics.

ABOUT MCCULLERS: RHP Lance McCullers Jr. is set to make his second start of the season.

In his season debut against the Boston Red Sox on March 30, he allowed one run on four hits and one walk with nine strikeouts in seven innings. It was his longest outing since Sept. 21, 2022 at Tampa, where he also went 7.0 innings. It was his first quality start and win since July 4, 2025 in Los Angeles against the Dodgers.

TODAY’S ROSTER MOVE: The Houston Astros placed RHP Hunter Brown on the 15-day IL today (retro 4/2) due to a right shoulder strain. To take his place on his active roster, Houston recalled RHP Christian Roa from Triple A Sugar Land.

AGAINST THE ATHLETICS: The Astros and A’s are facing each other today for the third of 13 scheduled games in 2026.

The Astros went 5-8 vs. the A’s in 2025, including a 3-4 record at Sutter Health Park. The Astros have own a 121-107 all-time record against the Athletics.

MR. 500: LF Yordan Alvarez recorded his 500th career RBI on Friday night on a sac-fly RBI in the third inning. He became the 15th player in franchise history to record 500 RBI. He is also the fastest player in franchise history to record 500 career RBI doing so in just 685 games, passing 1B Jeff Bagwell, who recorded 500 RBI in 717 games.

WALK THIS WAY: LF Yordan Alvarez walked a career-high tying four times yesterday vs. the Athletics. This marked the second time in his career he’s recorded a four-walk game, also Aug. 20, 2019 vs. Detroit.

Alvarez also tied the franchise record for walks in a nine inning game…the last Astros player to record four walks in a nine inning game was 3B Alex Bregman on June 3, 2023 vs. the Angels.

1B Jeff Bagwell holds the franchise record for walks in a single game with six on Aug. 20, 1999 in Miami against the Marlins, but the game went 16 innings.

YORDAN’S UPCOMING MILESTONES: LF Yordan Alvarez has recorded 173 career home runs, which makes him just one home run shy of matching franchise icon OF George Springer (174 HR) for the seventh on the Astros all-time list.

Sixth on the list is Alex Bregman at 191.

LEAGUE LEADERS: The Astros lead the Majors in runs (60), doubles (27) total bases (147), hits (87), walks (50), (OBP (.391), SLG (.479) and OPS (.870).

Individually, LF Yordan Alvarez leads the Majors in OBP (.590) and OPS (1.474), while ranking tied for first in runs (9). 1B Christian Walker leads the Majors in doubles (6).

DOWN ON THE FARM: The Astros Single A affiliate Fayetteville Woodpeckers defeated the Wilson Warbirds, 6-5 yesterday at SEGRA Stadium.

Astros number one overall prospect, OF Kevin Alvarez went 4×5 with two runs, two RBI and a double.

Astros number seven overall prospect RHP Ethan Pecko made a rehab start in the game, allowing two hits and striking out four in two scoreless innings.

Game Info

Game Date/Time: Sunday, Apri5 3, 3:05 p.m. CST

Location: Sutter Health Park, Sacramento, CA

TV: Space City Home Network

Streaming: SCHN+

Radio: KBME 790 AM & 94.5 FM HD2; TUDN 102.9 FM HD2 (Spanish)

Arizona Diamondbacks Gameday Thread, #10: 4/5 vs. Braves

PHOENIX, AZ - MARCH 30: A general view of the exterior of Chase field is seen prior to the game between the Detroit Tigers and the Arizona Diamondbacks on Monday, March 30, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Norm Hall/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

Today’s Lineups

BRAVESDIAMONDBACKS
Ronald Acuna – DHKetel Marte – 2B
Drake Baldwin – CCorbin Carroll – RF
Matt Olson – 1BGeraldo Perdomo – SS
Mike Yastrzemski – LFNolan Arenado – 3B
Michael Harris – CFJose Fernandez – DH
Ozzie Albies – 2BCarlos Santana – 1B
Mauricio Dubon – 3BTim Tawa – LF
Eli White – RFJames McCann – C
Jorge Mateo – SSJorge Barrosa – CF
Martin Perez – LHPBrandon Pfaadt – RHP

The D-backs have a chance to secure a split of the four-game series, despite having scored a total of just four runs across the first three games. Indeed, including the 1-0 win in the finale of the sweep over Detroit, they have scored five runs over four. Mind you, there have been worse streaks. Just last season, Arizona went seven straight games scoring two or fewer runs at the end of July. This included a series against the Pirates where it took 29 innings for the D-backs to get their first run – and that came courtesy of the Manfred Man. The team scored a total of seven runs and batted a collective .179 over more than a week. So this is weak sauce as hitting slumps go.

Outside of Thursday’s blow-up though, the pitching has been solid, and that has led to some very quick games. Save Thursday, three of the last four games have finished in under two hours and twenty minutes. Up until recently, that’s something you just didn’t see very often before the rules changed towards “brighter baseball”. In 2022, the last year under the old rules, Arizona played just one game in less than 2:20. A little earlier, the Diamondbacks went almost three years without such a game (Sep 6, 2013 to June 7, 2016). To have three of them since Wednesday shows how much things have changed with regard to game times.

All told, I’d probably have a quick loss than a long, dragged out one. Though short games are typically also going to be close, without many runs scored on either side. There are exceptions though. On July 1st last year, we beat the Giants 8-2, and only needed 2:16 to do it. And in May 2014, the Tigers required just one additional minute to inflict a thumping 13-0 defeat on the D-backs. At the other end, we have only had a single game pass the three-hour mark – the 9-6 win over Detroit. Those are now the exception. In 2021, we had a run of sixteen consecutive games over three hours. Cannot say I miss that in any way.

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